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  • S3 E8: With... Corinne Fowler - On this episode, Mia and Sam are joined by Professor Corinne Fowler. Corinne is an Honorary Professor of Colonialism and Heritage at the University of Le...
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Thursday, April 23, 2026

A 'uniquely beautiful landscape' at risk

On Thursday, April 23, 2026 at 7:33 am by Cristina in , , , , , ,    No comments
Keighley and Ilkley MP Robbie Moore spoke in Parliament against the plans for a giant wind farm at the heart of Brontë Country. The Telegraph and Argus reports it:
Keighley and Ilkley MP Robbie Moore (Conservative) introduced a Parliamentary debate considering the impact windfarm development might have on 2,300 hectares of protected peatland.
He argued the case against Calderdale Energy Park’s proposals to place up to 34 wind turbines on Walshaw Moor above Hebden Bridge which will impact on Calderdale and Bradford in West Yorkshire and Pendle in Lancashire. 
Calderdale Energy Park, whose statutory public consultation on the proposals runs until June 10, argues the site is in an area identified for generating on-shore wind power, helping deliver “reliable, home-grown renewable energy, helping to reduce energy costs, support local jobs and strengthen energy security”, the turbines capable of generating up to 240 mega watts (MW) on renewable energy.
But Mr Moore said this would come at a price to protected peatland, including damaging a vital carbon store, among other impacts on nature, and have a severe impact on the setting of key cultural heritage.
Taken together, that price would be too high, said Mr Moore in the debate.
“Understandably, our much-loved Brontë Society is firmly against the proposed wind farm development across our heritage landscape, which encompasses Top Withens, believed to be the inspiration for the setting of ‘Wuthering Heights’.
“That landscape, I might add, has a live application worked up right now for UNESCO world heritage status, along with listed status for Top Withens.
“If this wind farm proposal goes ahead, that landscape will be blighted forever.
“We know that because, even after the decommissioning stage of the wind farm, none of the infrastructure is proposed to be removed, apart from the turbines themselves.
“The road infrastructure, all that cabling and those deep foundations that sit beneath the turbines are not proposed to be removed once the wind farm comes to the end of its life, blighting our heritage landscape and the peat forever.”
Mr Moore said he had invited neighbouring MPs – for Shipley, Calder Valley, Halifax, Pendle and Clitheroe, and Burnley – to the debate and urged them to join him opposing the proposals, but was disappointed only Shipley MP Anna Dixon (Labour) and Calder Valley’s Josh Fenton-Glynn (Labour) attended.
Ms Dixon said she agreed with him that peatlands “are crucial in our fight against climate change” and also reduced flood risk, a very evident concern in Calder Valley.
She had been contacted over the proposals by some constituents: “They rightly believe that protected peatland should be protected.
“I agree with them, and I think that the Labour Government, and I hope the Minister, will give the same assurance – I believe that is why there has been a recent announcement that large infrastructure must also be covered by a biodiversity net gain.
“I urge the Government to listen to the arguments made in this debate.
“There could clearly be major negative impacts on our precious peatlands in this area of Yorkshire, and I ask that the Government look carefully and reconsider the proposals.”
Mr Fenton-Glynn, who since the proposals were announced has been under pressure from some constituents to openly oppose the plans, said he knew the moorland well and it was a “uniquely beautiful landscape, resplendent with curlews, lapwings and other moorland birds” though in itself this would not be reason to block the plans as the country needed to ramp up green energy infrastructure.
But following the science should inform the process: “The more we learn about peat and its role in absorbing carbon, the clearer it is that building on peat will do more harm than good,” he said.
Mr Fenton-Glynn said his point was not about a development in Calderdale but about the principle of trying to tackle climate change and looking at that “in the round” with regard to developments on peat and whether any developments on peat make sense.
“I think my position is fairly clear from what I am saying.
“I followed the evidence where it led me, and it led me to the concerns that I have expressed to Ministers fairly constantly, to the point where I have made clear my view that building on protected peat is counter-productive to our climate change aims,” he said.
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Business and Trade, Chris McDonald, responding for the Government, said: “From the contributions we have heard today, I would say there is strong agreement in this room on the need both to tackle climate change and to care for our special environments in the UK, including peatland.
“Because peat soils are rich in carbon, disturbances will have climate impacts.
“We therefore recognise that building infrastructure such as onshore wind on peatland can have detrimental impacts, and we appreciate that communities have valid concerns about that.
“That is why we have protections in the planning system requiring careful consideration from developers and decision makers when onshore wind farm developments are proposed on peatlands.
Mr McDonald said the Government was committed to publishing additional guidance regarding wind farm construction on peatland in England.
The Government was also in ongoing discussions with the Scottish Government about developing a carbon calculator tool for England similar to the one currently used in Scotland, which could inform policy decisions around developments on peatlands, he said.
Mr Moore said the debate had been worthwhile but he still had major concerns – the Government offering guidance rather than protection.
He claimed neighbouring MPs had not put forward a position as to whether they would join him in campaigning “as strongly as we can against this application.”
“Concerns have been raised, but there is no formal position,” said Mr Moore. (John Greenwood)
A contributor to The Harvard Crimson lists 'Seven Depictions of the 19th Century and the Women Who Wrote Them' including
‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall’ by Anne Brontë (1848)
“Wuthering Heights” may be the Brontë novel of the moment, but Anne Brontë’s 1848 novel, “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,” stands apart as one of the earliest feminist novels. The book begins with the arrival of the mysterious young widow Helen Graham and her son in a small town in Northern England. Rather than residing near the other villagers, Mrs. Graham chooses to inhabit a run down mansion on a hill named Wildfell Hall. Her behavior attracts disdain from others but intrigues a young farmer named Gilbert Markham. After he discovers her dark secret, Markham finally understands why Mrs. Graham hides away in her forbidding home. In “The Tenant of Wildfell Hall,” Brontë depicts the dark side of domesticity, rendering a staunch critique of the unequal treatment that women received in 19th century marriages. Mrs. Graham’s fearless abandonment of her husband makes her one of the first feminist characters. She does not desire to stick to convention but literally runs away from it. (Nina M. Jasanoff)
Artlyst reviews Paula Rego's exhibition of drawings, Story Line, at Victoria Miro London.
Among her strongest works are those of women. Rooted, sturdy and beefy-thighed, they seem to defy their apparent vulnerability. In the wonderful pastel on paper of Jane Eyre, the lone figure stands hands on her hips in a workaday red dress, nursing an air of rebellion. While her study for Germaine Greer shows the feminist icon sitting knees flopped open in a gesture of sexual defiance. (Sue Hubbard)
A contributor to Express didn't like Wuthering Heights 2026 and recommends the 2009 adaptation instead.
Wuthering Heights is one of those stories that always seems to be getting a new adaptation, with many proving somewhat divisive for fans of the original novel. Earlier this year, Emerald Fennell's take on the classic tale was released in cinemas, and, like many adaptations before it, left fans divided.
As a huge fan of the original novel, I knew I just had to see the film; although, having seen some reviews ahead of time, I was rather sceptical. I was a little shocked, though, as the film actually ended up being worse than I had predicted – and felt more like bad fan-fiction than an adaptation of Emily Brontë's writing. From bizarre casting, to out-of-character storylines and cutting out half of the story, the film was ultimately rather disappointing.
And while there are certainly plenty of other bad adaptations of Wuthering Heights out there (MTV's version, anyone?), there are some that are actually quite good.
One that has remained popular since its release, at least among fans of the Brontës, is the 2009 mini-series starring Tom Hardy and Charlotte Riley as Heathcliff and Cathy – a pairing whose chemistry was so good that they've since married in real life and welcomed two children together.
True to the story, however, the pair's on-screen counterparts didn't quite get a happy ending. Unlike the 2026 adaptation, and many others too, the 2009 version opted against stopping halfway through the story.
While the 2009 mini-series isn't without its issues, Heathcliff being white-washed being one inaccuracy that both adaptations are guilty of, the heart of the story itself is still there. (Isobel Pankhurst)
A contributor to Her Campus says the 2026 adaptation was 'trash'. A contributor to Artículo 14 (Spain) discusses film adaptations including Wuthering Heights 2026.

Harrogate Informer features the work of local jeweller Joanne Gowan.
Joanne explained how Emily Bronte’s 1847 masterpiece has impacted her as an artist:
The part of Wuthering Heights which always stays in forefront of my mind is actually within the third chapter where the narrator’s ghostly experience with an icy hand outside his window, the tree knocking at the window and Cathy’s ‘Let me in’” says Joanne, “then in the concluding chapters her ghost is always there, ever present.
I hope that I can do it some kind of justice, not an easy thing to do by any means especially as my understanding of the meanings within it have developed and changed in parallel with my own life and emotional experiences.
In a strange twist of fate when I was only 13, Kate Bush released her Wuthering Heights which at that time spoke to me exactly as I felt about the novel…and started me on new creative journeys with a passion for music, which in its turn led me to art college.
That was 40 years ago and little could the young art student Joanne have known how much the dramatic landscapes that the novel conjured would change the direction of her life.
Joanne said:
The seeds of my love of Yorkshire were sown when I was very young, indeed decades before I ever visited the county. From the age of nine or ten I read novels voraciously: Dickens, Hardy, Elliot, Austin [sic] and the Brontes, and a lot of the literature, poems and plays of that era.
But it was always the Bronte novels that fascinated me most, the ones that over the years I have read over and over, my understanding of which has grown and altered as I have. Through their writing I developed a love for the wilds and the moors that I had never seen: until I was in my 40s and came for a week every year with my four children, renting an old North Yorkshire farmhouse with no neighbours and no internet or telephone signal.
And so another 20 years on and I am living here and breathing the wild and the wuthering, and wanting to try to express my own impressions of my favourite Bronte novel: Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights, in my own artistic medium of precious jewellery.
During the past year, Joanne has been liaising with a stone carver from the renowned gemstone cutting region of Idar-Oberstein in Germany, to create a carved rock crystal image of Cathy. This carved head is approaching completion and she will have it at her studio for the launch of the Pateley Jewellery Quarter on the weekend of 25/26 April. The design, a vignette or picture piece, can be worn as a brooch or pendant but also is intended to be displayed as a work of art in precious materials.
It will represent that ‘Cathy’ moment at the window which in many ways defines and saturates the whole story.
Joanne said:
Many completed pieces of jewellery in my studio have the influence of the Yorkshire landscape running within them. Indeed it has been an influence on my work for very many years. So now I am delighted that I can call this place my heartfelt home.
I am always very happy to discuss my work and to create jewellery pieces for individual clients which will speak to them in a personal and life-affirming way. Since neolithic times people have felt the joy of creating and wearing jewellery, its possession seems to be an intrinsic part of the human condition. It feels the perfect time for me to create an iconic art piece of Wuthering Heights.
Deccan Chronicle has an article on 'The return of book reading' including the lure of classics such as Wuthering Heights.
 A couple of alerts for today, April 23, in Haworth:
Thu 23 Apr
2pm Brotnë Space at the Old School Room
7:30pm Zoom

This talk will be given by Professor Corinne Fowler, an author, public historian and co-curator of The Colonial Brontës exhibition at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in 2026. 
Corinne discusses Heathcliff's racial identity in Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel, Wuthering Heights. The talk will detail the colonial reading material which shaped Emily Brontë’s conception of Heathcliff's background and character before discussing references to Heathcliff's racial identity in the novel itself as well as in film versions of Wuthering Heights. The talk ends by focusing on the real-life historical presence of African people in the local area which spanned both Emily's lifetime and the period covered by the novel.  
Old School Room

The history and landscape of Haworth continue to inspire many artists, writers and poets. We are delighted to host the launch of local poet Lydia Macpherson’s pamphlet The Heights (Calder Valley Poetry). Lydia now lives in the last inhabited house before Top Withens. Her five times great-grandfather Jonas Sunderland farmed Top Withens (widely believed to be the location for Wuthering Heights) during the lifetimes of the Brontës.  Her first collection, Love Me Do (Salt, 2014), won the Crashaw Prize. 
Lydia will be joined by special guest poets Clare Shaw and Alan Buckley. Clare’s poetry collections include Towards a General Theory of Love (Bloodaxe, 2022) which won a Northern Writers’ Award. Their poetry is anthologised in the National Trust’s Nature Poems (2023) and 100 Queer Poems (Vintage Penguin Random House 2022). Alan Buckley’s collections include Touched (HappenStance, 2020) and Still (Blue Diode Press, 2025). He is a founding member editor of ignitionpress and has taught creative writing to young people with both First Story and Arvon.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Wednesday, April 22, 2026 7:30 am by Cristina in , ,    No comments
The Atlantic discusses 'The Rise of CliffsNotes Cinema'.
In Shakespeare’s Hamlet, the lovelorn Ophelia famously drowns. The prince of Denmark has cruelly spurned her, her father has died, and she’s stricken with grief. If only she had realized Taylor Swift’s vision for her: In the song “The Fate of Ophelia,” the pop star imagines that she has instead been saved by a new suitor. Her version of the tragic figure, Swift sings, is “no longer drowning and deceived, all because you came for me.”
Hollywood has been making me think of Swift’s track quite a bit lately. The sparkly earworm deploys one of her favorite tricks: messing around with a literary classic for lyrical fodder. Cinema has been going through its own “Fate of Ophelia” era these past few months, with a litany of new adaptations that dramatically alter their source material. The writer-director Emerald Fennell turned Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë’s Gothic novel about obsession and social status, into erotic fanfiction. [...]
Updating a classic isn’t inherently a bad idea; Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein, a dutiful adaptation of Shelley’s 1818 novel, just won three Oscars, and Fennell’s Wuthering Heights has enjoyed an excellent box-office run. Yet most of these projects have been as superficial as Swift’s single, in which Ophelia survives just by pledging “allegiance to your hands, your team, your vibes”—a cheeky reference to Swift’s fiancé, to be sure, but Ophelia’s problem was never really about the vibes. That reductiveness, though, works far better in a four-minute pop song than in a feature-length film. Call it the rise of CliffsNotes Cinema—watered-down transformations that offer glossy but thin summaries of the originals and strip away the challenging material that helped turn them into cultural mainstays in the first place. These movies make the provocative palatable: Uncomfortable relationships and nuanced characterizations—essentially, what made the stories endure—get lost in the fog of showy filmmaking. [...]
This type of nuance all but disappears in CliffsNotes Cinema, which often looks incredible—I’m certainly taken with the costumes in Wuthering Heights, as well as with the soaring sets in Frankenstein —but robs its audience of the chance to analyze anything for themselves. That’s largely because these movies dull the sharpest edges of their source material, aiming for obvious takeaways regardless of how nonsensically they’re rendered. Despite never giving its titular character an opportunity to explore her original identity, The Bride! gleefully insists that she has become an avatar for female empowerment. Rather than explore the book’s larger point that class is an inescapable burden, Wuthering Heights makes its central conflict about whether its protagonists can be together. These films argue that their characters act on raw emotions: lust, fury, sadness. Yet these feelings fail to linger in the audience. Unlike a Taylor Swift song that gets stuck in your head, they just fade away. (Shirley Li)
Collider ranks 'The 10 Greatest Gothic Book Masterpieces'.
4 'Wuthering Heights' (1847) by Emily Brontë
“Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.” The recent Emerald Fennell movie version was divisive, but Emily Brontë's original is a bona fide classic. Wuthering Heights tells the story of Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw, whose intense and destructive love shapes the lives of those around them across generations. Set on the windswept Yorkshire moors, the novel unfolds through layered narration, revealing the consequences of obsession and revenge.
The backdrop reflects the characters’ inner turmoil; all wild, untamed, and unforgiving. Wuthering Heights is a classic tale of passion and pain. There are also explicit supernatural elements, though they are used sparingly. Catherine’s ghost (whether real or imagined) lingers over the story, blurring the boundary between life and death. But, as with the best Gothic fiction, the supernatural is less important than the emotional reality it expresses. [...]
1 'Jane Eyre' (1847) by Charlotte Brontë
“I am no bird; and no net ensnares me.” Jane Eyre charts its heroine's evolution from orphan to fiercely independent woman. When she becomes a governess at Thornfield Hall, Jane falls in love with the enigmatic Mr. Rochester, only to discover a dark secret hidden within the estate. Thornfield Hall is a quintessential Gothic setting, with its locked rooms and mysterious sounds and the storm-lashed moors around it, while Rochester’s secret introduces elements of suspense and horror.
Structurally, the novel balances realism with Gothic intensity. It grounds its story in social reality, particularly the class and gender dynamics of the time, while also allowing moments of uncanny coincidence and heightened emotion to break through. Its biggest strength, though, is its compelling protagonist, a three-dimensional figure, torn between desire and principle, passion and restraint. (Luc Haasbroek)
2:14 am by M. in ,    No comments
 A new high school production of Jane Eyre opens tomorrow, April 23:
Adapted by Katie Alley
Bearden High School Theatre, Knoxcille, Tennessee, US
April 23-April 26

 Bearden High School Theatre proudly presents Jane Eyre, a sweeping stage adaptation originally devised in 2005 by director Katie Alley, featuring an original score. 
Join us April 23-26, 2026, and transport into Jane’s world as she journeys through hardship at Gateshead and Lowood to love, mystery, and self-discovery at Thornfield Hall. 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

First of all, a happy 210th birthday to Charlotte Brontë. And let us recommend a recent release to do with her life but from a different point of view: Eleanor Houghton's Charlotte Brontë's Life through Clothes, which starts precisely on this day in 1816 in Thornton.

The Star lists the Brontë-related events that will be taking place at Scarborough's forthcoming Books by the Beach, based at Queen Street Methodist Central Hall from Friday, June 5 to Sunday, June 7.
Brontë expert, author and scholar Deborah Lutz is flying in from the USA to share her new biography with Scarborough audiences at Queen Street on the Friday at 10am..
Her This Dark Night is the first full biography of Emily Brontë in more than 20 years. Emily was 27 when she started writing Wuthering Heights. Three years later, she was dead.
Out of step with her own time and remembered as the strangest of the three Brontë sisters, she has always been hard to know, especially given the destruction of her papers.
Deborah is one of the few people who has felt and examined much of the Brontë’s surviving material including letters, desks, chairs and books and all of the tiny poetry manuscripts and notebooks.
These include the hand-written manuscript of Emily’s poems rediscovered in 2021 at Honresfield House near the Brontë family home, Haworth Parsonage.
At the opening event, Deborah will reveal the politics and events of the era as well as the delights and tragedies of the Bronte family’s life, including Emily’s sisters Anne and Charlotte, which directly inspired much of Emily’s writing.
It’s a fresh take on her short but momentous life which shows why so many of us are still fascinated by the Brontë family.
Deborah will be in discussion with festival patron and former head of BBC Radio Helen Boaden.
The Emily Brontë theme continues with Essie Fox, the Sunday Times best-selling author of seven historical novels, including The Somnambulist which was shortlisted for the National Book Awards. She is the host of the podcast Talking the Gothic.
She will be talking about her reimagining of Wuthering Heights at Queen Street on the Friday at 12.30pm. Essie Fox’s new novel Catherine, told through the narrative voice of Catherine Earnshaw, is already being hailed as a classic in its own right.
Heather French, festival organiser, said: “Essie’s retelling of Wuthering Heights is haunting and atmospheric, and I was glued to it.
"It’s also topical as we’re now seeing a renewed cultural fascination with all things gothic – in books, films and fashion. I’m really looking forward to these two Brontë-themed events and of course we have very strong Brontë connections here in Scarborough."
Anne Brontë stayed in Scarborough and is buried in St Mary’s Churchyard. (Sue Wilkinson)
The Guardian features thriller writer Freida McFadden.
While she credits Daphne du Maurier and Charlotte Brontë as inspiration – “Rebecca and Jane Eyre were the original domestic thrillers,” she told the Times – her contemporary favourites include Verity by Colleen Hoover, Room by Emma Donoghue, and The Green Mile by Stephen King. (Ella Creamer)
An online alert from the Brontë Parsonage Museum and the Elizabeth Gaskell's House:
Wed 22 Apr, 7:00pm

Since its publication in 1857, Elizabeth Gaskell’s The Life of Charlotte Brontë has divided opinion. Some critics suggest it is historically unreliable – perhaps Gaskell’s sources were flawed and maybe she exaggerated or even invented details for profit? Now new research into her writing and methods tells a different story: that of a diligent whistleblower silenced by the very forces she sought to expose.
Now Graham Watson’s The Invention of Charlotte Brontë traces the events behind Gaskell’s sensational biography and the cultural legend it inspired – from her six-year friendship with Charlotte Brontë to the media scandal that followed the book’s release, when Gaskell was pressured into a false confession of error to protect her publisher from a lawsuit.
Graham Watson argues that long-standing criticisms of The Life of Charlotte Brontë, still repeated today, must be challenged, as they first appeared within weeks of its publication – and all came from the very people Gaskell had criticised.
Doomed survivor of a family of geniuses, Charlotte Brontë had a life as dramatic as her famous novel, Jane Eyre. Now you can join us as Graham Watson challenges the established narrative to reveal the Brontë family as you’ve never seen them before.
The first in the Charlotte Brontë and Elizabeth Gaskell mini-season, in partnership with Elizabeth Gaskell’s House.
12:30 am by M. in ,    No comments
Underdog. The Other Other Brontë gets performed in Northwich, UK:
by Sarah Gordon
22-25 April 2026, including Saturday matinee
Directed by Carole Shinkfield
With Emily Duffy, Miranda Chance, Laura Elizabeth, Tom Lilly, Gareth Leadbetter, Paul Roman, Daniel Tolley, and Steve Bird.

Charlotte Brontë has a confession about how one sister became an idol, and the other became known as the third sister. You know the one. No, not that one. The other, other one… Anne.
This is not a story about well-behaved women. This is a story about the power of words. It’s about sisters and sisterhood, love and jealousy, support and competition.
Sarah Gordon’s new play is an irreverent retelling of the life and legend of the Brontë sisters, and the story of the sibling power dynamics that shaped their uneven rise to fame.
The Northwich Guardian gives some more information:
Director Carol Shinkfield said: "They were the feminists of their time and I love the sense of anarchy within the play, which has allowed us to explore and subvert the traditional view of the Brontë sisters." (...)
Quick-witted in tone, the piece dismantles the notion of the Brontës as reclusive and reserved, instead presenting them as progressive thinkers navigating the challenges of a male-dominated literary world.
Carol, who recently completed an MA in theatre directing at the Arden School of Theatre, brings a fresh perspective to the show. (Jessica McKeown)

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Guardian has an article on the female gaze on screen and on paper.
Do you voraciously read the pages of steamy romantasy bestsellers by Sarah J Maas or Rebecca Yarros? Or flood your group chat with breathless recaps of the latest goings-on in TV series such as Heated Rivalry or Bridgerton? Or even immerse yourself in the divisive and challenging cinematic worlds of Emerald Fennell? If so, you surely can’t have failed to notice that in pop culture, the female gaze – storytelling that highlights the meandering, textured, sublimely messy inner worlds and wants of women – is enjoying an explosion.
On TV, you can see it everywhere, in the interior lives and desires taken up by Big Little Lies, Sirens or Reese Witherspoon and Kerry Washington’s Little Fires Everywhere. Romantasy harbours it in the shape of powerful maidens and sex in fae (fairy) realms, while Fennell’s Wuthering Heights and Promising Young Woman are marketed with the promise of converting women’s experiences into dark beauty on the big screen. (Deborah Linton)
The Australian Women's Weekly reviews The Chateau on Sunset by Natasha Lester.
Instead of excavating the forgotten story of a heroic woman from history, Natasha has built a new story that fictionalises 1950s and ‘60s Hollywood and rests it on the foundations of Jane Eyre. The orphaned heroine is Aria Jones, and she, the modern iteration of Jane, has been transported from gothic England to the Chateau Marmont during the Hollywood studio era. This new setting is no less confining than 1800s rural England, and plenty of menace lurks behind the hotel’s many doors, from ghostly apparitions to sleazy film directors.
Natasha’s characters are undeniably contemporary. The young women who fill the Chateau fizz with ambition, potent beauty and unmet potential. Their stories are inspired by real stars who once graced the hotel, including Marilyn Monroe and Natalie Wood. Aspiring actresses Calliope (who cannot be called beautiful because the word is “wholly inadequate”) and Flitter, who is “chasing beauty but hasn’t caught it yet” are tools for Natasha to explore the treatment of women under the studio system, and to show how they used what meagre power they had to take control of their own fates. A teenage Aria is welcomed into their shared bedroom where she finds sisterly love and advice amid cosy pyjama-parties and mint juleps ordered from Schwab’s.
The Chateau itself is almost a character. It observes and sighs and welcomes Aria, who was orphaned at the age of 13 after her parents are killed in a gas station inferno. The reason she has come to the chateau is that it is where her aunt, the washed-up actress Miss Devine Rey, lives.
The narrative shifts back and forth between young, newly arrived Aria, and a more mature Aria who has taken on the role of being a sort-of governess to Adele, the daughter of the new owner of the Chateau, gruff rock star, Theo Winchester.
Like Edward Rochester, Theo has a history of excess, and a mysterious, checkered past. Though he’s more conventionally attractive than the original. [...]
Aria’s goal in taking a job as Adele’s carer is to save enough money to one day break free of the Chateau. Just as Jane Eyre yearns to see the world beyond the English hillside, Aria dreams of the ocean. She is haunted by apparitions of fire, which foreshadows the inevitable fate of the building.
The Chateau on Sunset is not a re-telling, however, it is a re-imagining, and Natasha has allowed herself to create new fates for the characters. There is a distinct shift in tone after the famous woman-in-the-attic-scene, with plenty of surprises as the story barrels towards its ending. (Genevieve Gannon)
Donegal Daily features Charlotte Brontë and Jane Eyre for Charlotte's birthday tomorrow. AnneBrontë.org celebrates Ellen Nussey's birthday, which is today.
Brontë-related research in Africa:
Ouana Alassane Sekongo, University Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Côte d’Ivoire
Revue des Arts, Linguistique, Littérature & Civilisations, Vol 2, Mars 2026

In nineteenth-century England, Victorianism was an ideology based on the principle that men are more rational than women. As such, it divided the society into two distinct spheres, which were the private sphere for women and the public sphere for men. This paper aims to highlight that Brontë coins the character Jane, an educated and defiant girl who subverts these social norms and works hard to enter the public space just as men. In addition to textual evidence, the article relies on Judith Butler’s (1990) theory of deconstructing gender norms in order to demonstrate how Brontë’s novel questions the Victorian gender system and opens doors for women to express themselves and reveal their talents. The study concludes that after defying the ideology of Victorianism, Jane has not only got access to formal education, but also worked in the public sphere as a teacher. She, therefore, stands as a resilient and an emergent girl, serving as a role model for 21st century women.

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Atmospheric Perfumes " for anyone who secretly wants to live in a Brontë novel" on BuzzFeed:
The moors provide a staggering wealth of sensory inspiration. There is the visual poetry of purple heather and bright yellow gorse, but the true magic lies in the air itself: the scent of peaty, rain-soaked earth, moss-cloaked stones, and the sharp, ozonic chill of an approaching storm.
Beyond the wilderness lies the atmospheric indoor world of the Heights and Thrushcross Grange: the smoldering woodsmoke of a centuries-old hearth, the bitterness of kitchen herbs, aged tobacco, and the sweet, golden comfort of honey and oats.
If you've ever wished to carry the essence of the moors with you, I've curated a list of 12 niche and indie fragrances that capture the very heart of the Brontë sisters' world. From photorealistic rain to gothic smoke, here are the scents that will make you feel as though you've stepped directly into the mist: (Savannah)
Of course, if you don't know which one to try, BuzzFeed conveniently publishes a Wuthering Heights Quiz "To Discover Which Atmospheric Perfume Matches Your Gothic Heart".

The Craven Herald & Pioneer explores the links between Charlotte Brontë and the city of Craven:
A letter sent to the Craven Herald in 1914 shed light on author Charlotte Brontë's links with Craven. It also revealed some other fascinating snippets, writes Lesley Tate.
Novelist Charlotte Bronte spent a short time as a governess for a family at Stone Gappe, on the Skipton side of Lothersdale.
And 112 years ago, a "correspondent" for the Craven Herald wrote of her connections with Craven and her apparent dislike of children.
Charlotte, the eldest of the three Brontë sisters who survived into adulthood, lived at Haworth where she wrote her masterpiece, Jane Eyre, under the name of Currer Bell.
Trained as a teacher, she spent a few years, between 1839 and 1841 as a governess, including to the Sidgwick family at their summer resident, Stone Gappe in Lothersdale.
Charlotte was employed by the Sidgwicks in 1839, but did not take kindly to children, according to the Herald of 1914.
On June 8, 1839 in a letter to her sister, Emily, she wrote: "The country, the house and the grounds are divine. . . The children are constantly with me, and more riotous, perverse, unmanageable cubs never grew."
The Herald's correspondent of June, 26, 1914, a few weeks before Europe was plunged into war, wondered what Charlotte would have thought of the modern "enfante terrible".
"Surely, most children answer to her description at some period of their lives, and is it not only healthy that they should?" they asked.
Charlotte, who stayed for just a month at Stone Gappe before moving on, wrote in the same letter to her sister about Mr Sidgwick.
"Mr Sidgwick walked out with the children, and I had orders to follow a little behind.
"As he strolled on through the fields with his magnificent Newfoundland dog at his side, he looked very like what a frank, wealthy, Conservative gentleman ought to be. He spoke freely and unaffectedly to the people he met, and though he indulged his children, and allowed them to tease himself far too much, he would not suffer them grossly to insult others."
It may be that Mr Sidgwick was the inspiration for Edward Rochester in Jane Eyre, published in 1847. Mr Rochester, who employed the young Jane as his governess, also had a large Newfoundland dog.
It has also been suggested that one of the Sidgwick's children, John, who at one time threw a bible at Charlotte, was the inspiration for John Reed, who in Jane Eyre, throws a book at the young Jane, his step-sister.
The Herald pointed out Charlotte's use of the word Conservative, and explained it was then almost a new word when applied to politics. "The good old word 'Tory' is now only used as a catchphrase by our political opponents, " said the correspondent, who left readers in no mistake as to their political leanings.
Charlotte appeared to have little success as a governess, the correspondent continued, passing from post to post very rapidly.
Another sister, Annie Bronte, wrote in her diary: "Charlotte has left Mrs Wooler's, been a governess at Mrs Sidgwick's, left her, and gone to Mrs White's". The extract was dated 1841, which, bearing in mind Charlotte was born in 1816, showed that she had been a governess with at least three families before she was 25-years-old.
Charlotte wrote under the name of Currer Bell, and there were two popular theories about the origins of her pseudonym.
One was that she had been inspired by Currer Hall, near Beamsley. But the Herald's correspondent favoured a different theory. "It is more probable that it was then in honour of the family of Currer, who then lived at Kildwick Hall. The Currers possessed a magnificent library, the greater part of which is now at Eshton Hall, " said the correspondent.
There was also connection to a former headmaster of Skipton Grammar School, a Dr Cartman, who was described as a "great friend" of Charlotte's father, Patrick Bronte.
A letter from Charlotte written when she was in London in June, 1851, to her father begins: "Dear Papa - I am glad to hear that you continue in pretty good health, and that Mr Cartman came to help you on Sunday."
The Rev Patrick Brontë died in June, 1861 and the Bradford Review in describing the funeral at Haworth, mentions that Dr Cartman, of Skipton, was one of the bearers.
The Craven Herald of June, 1853, which was then a monthly publication, described the consecration of St Mary's Church, Embsay, in which the name of the Rev A B Nicholls was included. Mr Nicholls, then curate to Patrick Brontë at Haworth, was eventually to be married to Charlotte, but according to the Herald at the time, it was not a relationship approved of by Charlotte's father.
"It was in December, 1852, that Mr Nicholls proposed to Charlotte, " said the correspondent.
"Her father, who appears to have been of a violent temper, would not hear of the match. His relations with Nicholls afterwards became so strained that the latter had no alternative but to leave."
Mr Nicholls departed Haworth in May, 1853 - some ten days after the consecration of Embsay Church.
"It is now a matter of history that Charlotte eventually married Mr Nicholls, who survived her by many years, " said the correspondent, who writing a 100 years ago, added he had died just a few years earlier. Mr Nicholls left his portrait of Charlotte to the National Portrait Gallery, London. (Lesley Tate)
Secret Manchester shares an article about the wonders of Hathersage:
Back in the village, stop by Harrington’s butcher and deli for what locals say are “the best quiches this side of Manchester,” or enjoy a pint at The George, the 16th-century inn where a young Charlotte Brontë once stayed and found inspiration for Jane Eyre. (Vaishnavi Pandey)
Well... and we have this. On the BBC
A curlew conservation campaigner will spread his wings across Yorkshire's Three Peaks on Sunday for his latest fundraising challenge.
Matt Trevelyan will attempt to scale Pen-y-ghent, Whernside and Ingleborough in under 12 hours - dressed as his feathered friend Cathy the Curlew - a 10ft (3m) long home-made costume.
Trevelyan will be joined by his partner Claire, who will bring a touch of romance to the trek as Cathy's curlew companion Heathcliff. (Samantha Whelanand and Georgey Spanswick)
The New Indian Express wonders where the rom-com movies have gone. We wonder where fact-checking's gone in view of the blunder:
And even if they get it wrong like Emerald Fennell's heavy breathing adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's Wuthering Heights, at least they tried. (Kaveree Bamzai)
Brontë research everywhere. From Nepal:
Sushil Ghimire, Balkumari College, Chitwan, Nepal
Mindscape: A Journal of English & Cultural Studies, 4(1), 107–116

This study examines Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights (1848) and Parijat’s Blue Mimosa (1965), two debut novels written more than a century apart, in different worlds, yet connected by a shared portrayal of women’s suffering under patriarchal authority. The research explores how Catherine Earnshaw and Sakambari embody experiences of oppression, discrimination, and premature tragedy as consequences of deeply rooted gender hierarchies. The study adopts a qualitative approach, guided specifically by de Beauvoir’s concept of woman as the “Other” in The Second Sex (1949). According to de Beauvoir, patriarchal societies construct women as secondary, subordinate beings defined in relation to men. Applying this framework, the analysis explores how Brontë and Parijat represent their heroines as trapped in gendered hierarchies yet simultaneously striving for selfhood and autonomy. The findings reveal that although Brontë was writing in nineteenth-century England and Parijat in twentieth-century Nepal, both texts depict strikingly similar patterns of female marginalization, particularly within family structures. Catherine and Sakambari resist patriarchal expectations in distinct ways-Catherine by questioning marital conformity and Sakambari by refusing to conform to prescriptive feminine norms-thereby asserting women’s agency while highlighting the universality of patriarchal oppression. By situating Wuthering Heights and Blue Mimosa in a cross-cultural and transnational dialogue, this study contributes to comparative feminist literary scholarship. It demonstrates how women writers, despite temporal and spatial distance, articulate parallel experiences of oppression and resistance, affirming the role of literature as a powerful medium for feminist critique and consciousness.
From Iraq:
Asst. Lect. Mohsin Kamil Shlaka, Imam Al-Kadhum College I.K.C
Wasit Journal for Human Sciences, 22(1), 1363-1352.

This study focuses on the central role of the natural environment, particularly harsh weather and storms. It reveals how nature in the novel embodies an active force that shapes characters' emotions and choices, reflects their inner conflicts, and sustains a constant tension between the human and natural worlds. From this perspective, Brontë offers an early vision of modern environmental thought by highlighting the profound connection between human experience and the surrounding environment.
The research methodology employs a descriptive-analytical approach using textual analysis within an eco-critical framework. The procedures include a meticulous reading of the novel to extract natural symbols, environmental allusions, and images of the relationship between humanity and nature, followed by analysis in accordance with the principles of ecocriticism. This textual analysis and the ecocritical framework aim to provide a deeper understanding of the environment's role in shaping the narrative discourse and the characters' psychology.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Saturday, April 18, 2026 12:43 pm by Cristina in , , , ,    No comments
The Daily Cougar vindicates the public school system and curriculum in front of the ones that want to create a society of "competent" (aka docile idiot serfs for our technofeudal pseudolords) people:
In one survey, the average American felt that they used “just 37 percent of the information they learn in school.” Some of the information that Americans found “most useless” included the Pythagorean theorem, the number pi and social activities like making paper snowflakes. Respondents expressed a desire for more practical instruction, such as how to file taxes or perform car maintenance. (...)
When a student is forced to write an essay about “Jane Eyre,” they are really practicing writing a persuasive argument and articulating their thoughts into words, which is useful in law, business and everyday conversation. (Maria Krylova)
The University of Delaware's The Review... well, reviews Wuthering Heights 2026: 
Now, this film was never supposed to be a remake or a direct adaptation of the novel, and the film’s director made that clear in interviews while explaining that is why the title remains in quotes. She has stated that it is how she remembers the book from the first time she read it as a teenager. While I can appreciate that this is how her teenage self read the book, even calling this an interpretation is a disservice to the original story. Emily Brontë is rolling in her grave. 
Despite my qualms with the film from a literary standpoint, I actually enjoyed it. Cinematically, it is a beautifully produced film. It is visually pleasing to watch, with intricate set designs such as the walls in Catherine’s room — which were modeled after Margot Robbie’s skin and included moles, veins and even hair. The costumes and hair for this piece, while albeit not the most historically accurate, are stunning and the overall attention to detail is impressive. (Jeni Nance)
Best Fictions of all time in The Sunday Guardian (India):
 Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
A pioneering feminist narrative, Jane Eyre blends romance, mystery, and emotional independence in a deeply character-driven story. (Dikshant Sharma)
The fashion and beauty section of The Sunday Times (South Africa) concludes that this is the year of yearning and you know why?:
 From windswept cheeks to just-bitten lips; the runways are overtaken by yearning. (...)
The inspiration: Wuthering Heights, romance-novel yearning, feral, flushed skin, wind-beaten cheeks
As seen at: Chanel, Chloe, Ann Demeulemeester, Ermanno Scervino, and Simone Rocha
When we first saw butt-grazing princess hair at the 2024 Met Gala, we were inclined to think it was a fleeting phase. But it seems that the sighting was only the beginning of what would be a resurgence of all things romantic. In 2026, romance makes a triumphant return to the runways, red carpets, TV and film, with this year’s most heart-racing film, Wuthering Heights, based on Emily Brontë’s tragic romance novel, sweeping the world up in a surge of skin-flushing romance. Dubbed the ‘year of yearning’, it seems that the runways’ response to the world’s current state of conflict and war is one of unadulterated displays of love and feral human emotion, sparking a romance resurgence that can only be described as utterly joyful. (Nokubonga Thusi)
Hello! Magazine sells the wonders of  a paritcular Yorkshire Dales hotel like this:
The Coniston Hotel & Spa has a touch of Wuthering Heights magic from the scenic hills and offers some extra thrills onsite as well...
After watching Wuthering Heights and dreaming about being swept into the Dales in Jacob Elordi's arms, a staycation to the Yorkshire Dales suddenly seemed very appealing.  Except, of course, there was no Jacob Elordi (no shade to my boyfriend), and my stay was perhaps a little more "indoorsy" than running around the hills like Cathy. However, the Coniston Hotel & Spa did offer a sprinkle of Wuthering Heights magic with its hilly backdrop and moody, Gothic charm... (Iona MacRobert)

Sprinkles of Wuthering Heights magic... ok. Whatever.

Ipshita Nath, author of the forthcoming Diseased Empire: How Faith, Medicine, and Race Shaped British India writes in Scroll.in about Catherine as a ‘consumptive chic’ example:
In contemporary popular discourse, Heathcliff and Catherine’s relationship is viewed as toxic and codependent, but deeper psychoanalytic interpretations of their behaviour become critical in studying the horrific dimensions of human attachment and desire. The themes of power, psychological disintegration and self-destructive trauma imbued in the narrative demand deeper engagement because while the characters are flawed to the point of appearing villainous, they are poignant for the fate that meets them in the end.
In this, Catherine emerges as perhaps one of the most haunting Victorian heroines, progressing from a wild and untamed young woman, to an obsessive and reprehensible heroine – an antithesis to an idealised Victorian lady – finally transmuting into a spectral apparition after her death. Her character arc resists any closure as her long sickness and prolonged suffering do not end in death, but assume unheimlich proportions as she comes back to haunt Heathcliff, disturbing the ontological boundaries between life and death.
Indeed, in the liminal space between life and death, Catherine is shown to be clinging to the past and then suffering endlessly due to it. Her despair, feelings of guilt and entrapment, progressive physical disintegration take on physical symptoms of fevers and anorexia that slowly wither her away. She becomes a tragic Gothic heroine not only for what happens to her in her dysfunctional relationships, but also for her emotional and sexual weaknesses that attenuate her in the end.
For this reason, Catherine’s physical and emotional deterioration needs to be studied as a product of a distinctly Victorian trend and aesthetic that valorised and eroticised weakness and suffering in women. She physically embodies the cultural idea of the “consumptive chic” who is fevered, emaciated and dying, as she becomes both victim and perpetrator – the haunted and the haunting.

A video of The Huffington Post, with some AI-generated deep dives explores the Charlotte Brontë "dislike" of Jane Austen's prose. The House of Brontë publishes a video on Heathcliff, man or monster? The Brontë Sisters UK makes a graveyard exploration in Haworth that reads the stones of ordinary villagers who shared their world with the Brontës — tracing stories of loss, scandal, and survival in nineteenth-century Yorkshire.

4:59 am by M. in ,    No comments
A new Paula Rego exhibition is opening in London, including some of her Jane Eyre series:
Victoria Miro Gallery
16 Wharf Road, London N1 7RW
16 April–23 May 2026

Victoria Miro is delighted to present a major exhibition of drawings and works on paper by Paula Rego (1935–2022). The most comprehensive exhibition of Rego’s drawings to date, Story Line shines new light on Rego’s evolving use of line in media from pen and ink to pastel, conté, charcoal and pencil, and how it was driven by her unique approach to storytelling throughout her life. The exhibition is accompanied by a new book written by the artist’s son, Nick Willing.
Paula Rego considered herself first and foremost a ‘drawrer’ (her word). From political protest to personal introspection, activism to domestic power games, subversive humour to challenging family relationships, it was through drawing that she understood herself and the world around her, discovering ways of expressing complex ideas through a single image.
The works on show vary from intimate drawings which have never been exhibited before to studies for some of Rego’s most recognisable paintings. These are accompanied by notes, letters, sketchbooks, photographs and other archival material from throughout Rego’s life – among myriad rarities is a drawing Rego made when she was nine years old of her grandmother, while the exhibition concludes with works including a drawing she made of her own granddaughter.
The exhibition includes: 
Study for Jane Eyre, 2002. Pencil on paper 42 x 29.7 cm 16 1/2 x 11 3/4 in 
Jane Eyre, 2002 Pastel on paper 80 x 57 cm 31 1/2 x 22 1/2 in (in the picture)
Young Mr Rochester, 2000 Pastel on paper mounted on  aluminium 69 x 49.5 cm 27 1/8 x 19 1/2 in 
Study for Wide Sargasso Sea, 1991 Graphite on paper 42 x 29.7 cm 16 1/2 x 11 3/4 in 
The Jane Eyre pastel is also on the cover of the London Review of Books (April 2, 2026 issue):


Friday, April 17, 2026

Charlotte Brontë's 210th birthday is drawing near and several celebrations are afoot. The Telegraph and Argus announces that next weekend (April 25-26) the Brontë Birthplace will be offering free entry to visitors named Charlotte.
The Brontë Birthplace in Thornton is giving free admission to anyone named Charlotte on Saturday, April 25 and Sunday, April 26, in celebration of Charlotte Brontë’s 210th birthday.
Charlotte Brontë, author of Jane Eyre, Shirley, Villette and The Professor, was born at the house on Market Street on April 21.
Thomas Haigh, audience development and marketing lead at the Brontë Birthplace, said: "It was here in this very house that Charlotte’s story began, long before Jane Eyre and long before her name became famous across the world.
"We want to mark this special day by doing something a bit unexpected.
"We would love to get as many Charlottes as possible to step inside the place where her life began and to be part of a shared, living tribute to her legacy."
The house will be open from 11am to 4pm, with visitors invited to explore the museum, bring family members, and enjoy the on-site café.
Visitors will also be entered into a prize draw to stay in Charlotte’s room, which is now an Airbnb. (Harry Williams)
Offaly Live has an article on the birthday celebrations planned for this weekend, which we featured in our previous post.

Ahead of her birthday, too, The Yorkshire Post features Charlotte Brontë and her clothes based on the excellent recent book by Eleanor Houghton, Charlotte Brontë's Life Through Clothes.
One morning in early June, 1850, Charlotte Brontë finally met her literary hero, William Makepeace Thackeray. To do so, the 4ft 8in writer - recently unmasked as Currer Bell, the author of Jane Eyre, published in 1847 - chose to wear her “power gown”, a vibrant blue-and-white floral print dress made in a fine alpaca fabric woven in her native Yorkshire.
The meeting took place in the drawing room of her publisher George Smith. Thackeray was impressed, later recalling: “New to the London world, she entered it with an independent, indomitable spirit of her own.”
From experience, Charlotte knew that appearance and favourable first impressions mattered. She had been stung by criticism when she joined the stylish young ladies of Roe Head School in Mirfield in 1931, told that she was “very ugly” by one pupil, Mary Taylor, who later described her as wearing “very old-fashioned clothes, and looking very cold and miserable”.
A surviving drawing by Charlotte, of a young woman wearing a highly fashionable, early 1930s-style puff-sleeved gown, shows how much she had noticed and been influenced by the Roe Head girls.
This is highlighted by historian and costume consultant Eleanor Houghton, whose new book, Charlotte Brontë’s Life Through Clothes, examines how surviving pieces from the author’s wardrobe give remarkable insight into her experience, her feelings and her work.
The book is illustrated by Eleanor’s own beautiful drawings which capture the detail of the dresses, shawls, bonnets, boots, combs, corsets and more.
Charlotte made her own clothes, with housekeeper Martha Brown, using fabrics from Yorkshire mills. The gown that later became known as the “Thackeray Dress” was made in a cloth called Alpaca Orleans, a blend of alpaca and cotton, woven by Sir Titus Salt who had mills in Bradford just nine miles from Haworth (Salts Mill in Saltaire opened later in 1953).
ir Titus was a fabric pioneer, and managed to transform fine alpaca fleece into a lustrous but hardwearing fabric that quickly became a rival to silk. Printed (probably in Accrington) in a vibrant blue and white pattern of leaves and flowers, Charlotte bought the fabric around 1848 - and the blues retain their bright quality to this day.
Charlotte left most of her wardrobe to her husband, Arthur Bell Nichols, and some also to Martha. Pieces were acquired by fans down the years, but many found their way home to the Brontë Parsonage Museum at Haworth, which now looks after around 150 items.
The Thackeray dress was given to Martha’s niece, who made significant alterations, adding a brown collar and removing fabric from its full skirt.
Charlotte’s clothing reveals a woman more body and fashion-conscious than suspected. In Brussels, she bought a corset measuring just 18.5 inches around the waist. It became a staple, and later caused concern to her publisher George Smith. Eleanor Houghton writes: “Nearly forty years after her death, still impacted by what he had seen, Smith told his friend, the novelist George Gissing, that Charlotte was ‘very vain of her narrow waist … and laced herself so tight as to injure herself’.”
Pointing out that tight lacing at the time was the practice of a minority of women, Eleanor suggests that Charlotte, always conscious of her perceived lack of beauty, was “deliberately and blatantly exhibiting her femininity”. The corset might also have served as an armour as she sought strength and protection while nursing a heart broken by her unrequited love for M Heger in Brussels.
On display now at the Brontë Parsonage is a paisley print dress Charlotte wore in the 1840s, exotic and vibrant in shades of duck egg blue, mint, red and black. One Haworth resident, who recalled seeing them many times in the village, said: “I don’t know that I ever saw them in owt but print - I’ve heard it said they were pinched - but it was a nice print … They looked grand.”
Born on April 21, 1816, this Tuesday marks the 210th anniversary of Charlotte Brontë birth. The Brontë Parsonage Museum and the nearby Brontë Birthplace in Thornton are hosting special events, including performances and talks.
Eleanor has been a consultant for many TV and film historical dramas including the BBC’s To Walk Invisible, written and directed by Sally Wainwright, and Frances O’Connor’s 2023 biopic, Emily.
In 2022, in collaboration with the Brontë Parsonage Museum, she curated a large exhibition of Charlotte’s surviving wardrobe. “The museum has become a second home. The staff have been endlessly patient and helpful and always willing to clamber to the back of the Bonnell Store or to upend the library in search of a particular garment or record,” she says.
“I considered why Charlotte had chosen each piece, what it revealed of her taste, the challenges she faced, and the sartorial conventions and codes of 19th‑century society.”
She traced how and where the clothes were worn, how they were changed, and how they shaped Charlotte’s daily experience, studying them alongside letters and diaries, to uncover a rich, complex picture of Charlotte and her ever-changing world.
“The village’s surviving mills and weavers’ cottages are reminders, too, that Charlotte lived in a landscape shaped by the Industrial Revolution and by the textile economy that produced so many of the fabrics in her wardrobe.
“These gowns, bonnets, bags, and boots have presented to us a very different Charlotte Brontë,” she says. “She is a woman who is more rounded, more three-dimensional and braver, bolder, and yet somehow more vulnerable. She is less isolated and more globalised. She is more fashion-conscious and defies long-held preconceptions.
“She shows herself to be very self-critical, but also provocative and tenacious. By hearing the clothes’ testimonies, we encounter Charlotte not simply as a writer but as a real, thinking, feeling, breathing woman.
“Yet these clothes reveal more than Charlotte alone. They bring the world she inhabited vividly into view — nineteenth-century Yorkshire, with its rugged moors and sprawling villages; the networks of makers, merchants, and markets; the drive and creativity of industrial innovation; and the global routes that brought fabrics, fibres and influences from France, Peru, Mexico, Canada, and the United States to a little parsonage in the West Riding.
"They allow us to see how Charlotte navigated her social and material world, balancing expectation, personal comfort, and self-expression — and in doing so, they let us step closer to the woman behind Jane Eyre, behind Lucy Snowe, and to see beyond them to the life she really lived. (Stephanie Smith)
BBC features Charlotte Brontë's manuscript Journal of a Frenchman, which she wrote as part of the second series of the Young Men’s Magazine in September 1830. The manuscript was rediscovered in 2019 and acquired by the Brontë Parsonage Museum.
A lost manuscript which had been hidden for more than a century has uncovered a teenage Charlotte Brontë's fascination with "very naughty" Parisian society.
The Journal of a Frenchman was the missing part of a series of The Young Men's Magazine, which Brontë edited and wrote aged 14.
It belongs to the Brontë Parsonage Museum and has been analysed for the first time by the University of Chester's Professor Deborah Wynne, who said she was honoured to be chosen.
On reading the magazine Wynne said she discovered aspects to Charlotte Brontë she "hadn't really encountered before".
"It's written as though Charlotte herself is a French young man who's a dandy. He gets drunk and disorderly.
"So you've got this Yorkshire clergyman's daughter, who seems so respectable, but she seems to know all about being drunk and disorderly in Paris in this journal entry.
"And you realise she had this sense of humour, which doesn't always come out in quite the same raucous way in her novels.
"She's more ladylike in the way she writes in her novels, whereas she gave herself this freedom to write as a man and really went to town with that," she said.
In 2019, the magazine was discovered and purchased by the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth, where the sisters lived and wrote their novels, such as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.
The museum had all other issues of The Young Men's Magazine and bought the September 1830 issue when it appeared in a Parisian auction house.
The museum set up a fundraising campaign, which Wynne donated to, and it returned to Haworth where it has now been examined and preserved.
Six scholars were invited to analyse the work the results of which were published in The Journal of the Brontë Society last year.
Wynne said discovering the manuscript was "fitting together this piece into a jigsaw".
"It was an amazing experience to see that manuscript and know it had been hidden away for over a century," she said.
"To know I was the first person to actually push all of that jigsaw together, as it were, it was really exciting. So it's been one of the best projects I've ever worked on."
She said themes in the manuscript reappear in Brontë's later more well-known works, such as Jane Eyre and Villette.
"She really presents the aristocratic characters in France negatively. And later in her novels, a lot of the aristocratic characters are presented negatively too," she said.
"So you can sort of see how she's already a little bit disapproving of her Frenchman. And in the end, he loses all of his money and he becomes a tavern keeper. And he says he's much happier drawing pints for the people who come into his tavern.
"There is this sense that France is a very naughty sort of place. It's a place where things go on that don't in Yorkshire parsonages."
Measuring just 3cm by 6cm the magazine is part of a series of works the Brontë children wrote on scraps of paper because of the high cost of paper in the Victorian era.
Principal curator at the Brontë Parsonage, Ann Dinsdale, explained the little manuscripts were meant to look like printed books and magazines produced at the time.
"These tiny little books have got title pages, they've got contents pages, they contain all the kinds of stories, reviews, poetry that you'd expect to find in Blackwood's magazine.
"Some of them have even got advertisements in the back. So these were the first publications by the Brontës really."
She said the children would have created them using quill pens.
"It would have taken a fair amount of practise to kind of devise this almost sort of italicised style of writing that they developed for the little books," she said.
"It became like a secret code among the siblings because they must have realised that if their father or their aunt came across any of these tiny manuscripts they wouldn't have been able to read them.
"Which is probably quite a good thing because some of the content is not the kind of thing you would expect from the minister's children." (Grace Wood)
Professor Deborah Wynne's full analysis of the manuscript can be read in Volume 50, 2025, of Brontë Studies.

The Guardian reviews the exhibition Paula Rego: Story Line at Victoria Miro, London.
Alongside the biblical references are literary greats: the figure of Jane Eyre, less straightened than sturdy, as well as the young and handsome Mr Rochester; Orpheus and the maenads, wild and free; Germaine Greer sitting with her knees apart and the soles of her feet together. (Chloë Ashby)
Variety and others report film director Pedro Almodóvar's recent comments on Jacob Elordi and Wuthering Heights 2026 on a recent Spanish podcast.
Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar is weighing in on Jacob Elordi’s rapid rise and questioning whether the actor has yet proven his full range. [...]
Almodóvar acknowledged Elordi’s growing star power, saying he believes the Australian actor is “without doubt” on track to become a major star. Still, he admitted he remains uncertain about how to define him, raising the question of whether Elordi is primarily a sex symbol or a performer with deeper dramatic range.
“I’ve been wondering whether he’s just a sex symbol or a respected actor,” Almodóvar said, adding that he would need to see Elordi in a role that demands more before reaching a clear conclusion.
The director also critiqued some of Elordi’s recent projects, arguing that they do not fully showcase the actor’s abilities. He pointed to “Wuthering Heights” and “Frankenstein,” suggesting the material limits the opportunity for more layered performances. Almodóvar candidly characterized “Wuthering Heights” as “very bad,” while noting that neither Elordi nor his co-star Margot Robbie were to blame. (Kennedy French)
Hello! recommends 'The best of Britain on screen – six places to visit from Hertfordshire to the Highlands', including
3 Wuthering Heights
Where? Yorkshire Dales
Yorkshire’s raw, wild, moody moors are as much a character in Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel as Cathy and Heathcliff. So where else could filming for Emerald Fennell’s movie version take place? The production used spots around rippling Swaledale, one of the loveliest and least-touched valleys in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Scenes were shot amid Low Row’s comely stone cottages and in the untamed moors above, around Old Gang Smelt Mill and Surrender Bridge – which, incidentally, also starred in the opening credits of All Creatures Great and Small. There’s great walking country all around. (Sarah Baxter)
Hindustan Times wonders:
Ever watched a movie and wondered what the main character would smell like? [...] Margot Robbie’s Barbie would go for a sugary pink gourmand scent, while her Catherine Earnshaw in Wuthering Heights would reek of mud, rain and zero closure. (Kritika Kapoor)
A contributor to Her Campus discusses 'The Debate Over Wuthering Heights'.
1:10 am by M. in , , ,    No comments
The Banagher Brontë Group is preparing to celebrate Charlotte Brontë's birthday on Saturday, April 18, in Crank House, Main Street, Banagher, commencing at 3.30pm.

The main event of the afternoon will be the world premiere of Brontës: Love and Honour, a melodic tribute to the celebrated 19th-century Brontë family of Yorkshire. (3:30 PM, Crank House)
This cycle of ten studio-recorded songs was written by the well-known composer Michael O'Dowd and his wife, Christine. The cycle relates the joys and sorrows of the family in music and lyrics with linking dialogue and illustrations to provide ambience and clarity.

The afternoon will also include a 'Miscellany for Charlotte', a session of readings created or chosen by members of the group and others wishing to do so.
Following a series of creative writing sessions, a selection of new writings, including poems by pupils from sixth class in St Rynagh's Primary School, are ready for the celebrations.

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Thursday, April 16, 2026 7:30 am by Cristina in , ,    No comments
A contributor to Daily Maverick makes 'The case for pen and paper in a fast-moving world' and mentions seeing famous authors' handwriting.
In the British Library’s Treasures Collection, I recently discovered a number of original manuscripts, including those of Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre and Virginia Woolf.
Looking at the physical pages, I was struck by how handwriting itself can also hint at a person’s personality and character, that digital texts by comparison can sometimes be inhibiting as a method of expression.
The manuscripts gave the impression of “working pages”, with parts of sentences crossed out, words inserted and phrasing adjusted.
It reminded me of the care involved with crafting a manuscript or original document – first in setting the words down on the page, second in perfecting them, and third in the process of editing and eliminating to reach an improved overall effect.
Skipping the written word in favour of digital convenience may quietly limit both our creativity and the quality of our work. The slower pace of handwriting gives us space to consider our words more carefully, refining both clarity and intent as we go. (Louise Janovsky)
Newcastle Herald recommends The Chateau on Sunset by Natasha Lester.
The 10th novel by Perth-based Natasha Lester boldly blends the beloved story of Jane Eyre with the vibrant history of Hollywood from the 1950s to the 1970s. After the death of her parents, young Aria Jones is sent to live with her reclusive starlet aunt at the Chateau Marmont, a hotel on Hollywood Boulevard with a notorious reputation. After learning a secret that will haunt her childhood, Aria finds solace and anonymity in the hotel's library. When the hotel is sold to a mysterious rock star and his troubled daughter, Aria has the opportunity to be much more than invisible.
Salamanca al día (Spain) tells about a recent event about the lives and works of the Brontë sisters.
12:30 am by M. in , ,    No comments
A Zoom alert for tomorrow, April 17:
Fri 17 Apr, 7:30pm

Join us for this special online event with Mayukh Sen, author of Love, Queenie: Merle Oberon, Hollywood’s First South Asian Star. We will be delving into the life of Merle Oberon who famously portrayed Catherine Earnshaw in William Wyler’s 1939 adaptation of Wuthering Heights and learning how this Hollywood legend’s life was just as dramatic as Emily Brontë’s novel.

Mayukh’s biography of Oberon is the first in over 40 years and is a finalist for the 2025 National Book Critics Circle Award for Biography. Mayukh is a 2026 United States Artists Fellow, and he teaches film and television journalism at New York University. In a past professional life, he was the James Beard Award-winning author of Taste Makers (2021).

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Wednesday, April 15, 2026 7:22 am by Cristina in ,    No comments
Variety and others report that Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights albums has been nominated to the American Music Awards (May 25th)  category of Best Soundtrack.

My Met Media reviews Wuthering Heights 2026:
The saving grace of this film, however, is the gorgeous cinematography. Each shot is picturesque, which is characteristic of Fennell’s previous films Saltburn and Promising Young Woman.
Each scene is heavily considered, and the setting captures the gothic aesthetic of the original novel. Catherine’s wedding scene is haunting, with moving tulle and muted colors. Fog fills several scenes and leaves a lasting impression of mystery and the cold world of Wuthering Heights.
Overall, this film is beautiful to look at. However, it could have stood to have more time in the writing room. In fact, it may have benefited if the film had not been loosely inspired by Wuthering Heights. Many of the references hold the film back, and it could have made a lasting impression as its own unique narrative. (Sky Briggs)
On Angelus, a Catholic priest reviews the film too:
The film is “based” on the 1847 novel (which I finally read) in the same way Monty Python’s “Life of Brian” is based on Scripture, and “travesty” is too anodyne a word to describe what director Emerald Fennell did to poor Emily Brontë’s creation.  (Msgr. Richard Antall)
 A new Brontë-related paper has been published:
by Chloe Miller
Digital Literature Review, 13(1), 115–129. https://doi.org/10.33043/DLR.13.1.115-129

This essay explores space as a narrative presence in literature, further expressed through film, and examines how settings act as living presences that shape the inner worlds and conflicts of their characters. In Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights and Andrea Arnold’s film adaptation, the domestic spaces of Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange embody and construct identity, which is reinforced or challenged by the moor. Perspectives from spatiality like bell hooks’s “The Margin as a Space of Radical Openness,” Michel Foucalt’s concept of heterotopia and Gaston Bachelard’s The Poetics of Space explain how environments reflect psychological depth, social position, and emotional confinement. The contrast between the rugged Heights and the refined Grange reflect oppositions of passion and civility, which are central to characterization. Arnold’s adaptation reinterprets these spatial dynamics through a realist view that utilizes physical texture, weather, and isolation.

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

A contributor to Literary Hub argues that 'Emerald Fennell’s 'Wuthering Heights' is good, actually'.
Before you descend to the comments/clutter up my mentions about this, some context for what kind of cultural consumer I am: I would so much rather see some insane-concept Shakespeare than the classical-dress one. Which leads me to put a clarifying question to you, dear reader: what are you looking for in an adaptation? Are you looking for a one-to-one analogue? By that metric, The Shining is inarguably a terrible adaptation—but as I’ve said elsewhere and as I’m sure many would agree, Kubrick’s film is a great adaptation because it does a spectacular job adapting its source material, which is to say taking the original and transmuting it into something new, something different, and yet something that nevertheless feels of-a-piece. So it is with Fennell’s film! (Although, to be clear: I’m not here to tell you Wuthering Heights is an equivalent piece of film-making—it isn’t.)
There was a lot of flack being flung at this Heights for being all vibes, but honestly, why not do that with an adaptation? Adapting a classic novel is always going to be a risk, because generations of people have read it and culturally it has become something everyone has a vague opinion about—so you’re always going to have people who are mad that it didn’t include X thing that they really cared deeply about.
And Emily Brontë has always been the coolest (slash “weirdest“) of the Brontë sisters, the one onto whom you can project the most—and whose single book was resolutely cooler, sexier, stranger than the combined works of either of her sisters. So why not make a sumptuous Gothic feast of a film lensed through a Millennial’s memories of the covers of supermarket-checkout-line bodice-rippers they maybe wanted to be reading instead when they were first assigned the Brontës?
Give me this kind of weirdo interpretation over yet-another-stuffy-period-piece any day! I’m going to remember some of the images from this film forever (the leeches! the houses, both of them! the very-Millay-esque piles of gin bottles!) while other aspects fade entirely—which is, funnily enough, exactly what has happened to me with the actual novel. (Drew Broussard)
According to Digital Spy, Wuthering Heights 2026 is 'just one of the star-studded must-watches coming to Prime Video'. The Teen Magazine has a track-by-track review of Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights album.

Broadway World reports that an adaptation of Jane Eyre will be on stage at the Mercury Theatre Colchester in September.
A brand new production of Jane Eyre, based on Sally Cookson, Mike Akers and the original company's adaptation of the Charlotte Brontë novel, will come to the Mercury Theatre Colchester in September.
Jane Eyre will be directed by Lily Dyble as a result of her winning the 2025 Royal Theatrical Support Trust Sir Peter Hall Director Award.
The co-production, supported by a grant from the RTST, will premiere at the Mercury Theatre from 26 September to 10 October, before touring to Rose Theatre from 13 to 24 October, Northern Stage from 3 to 7 November and Storyhouse from 10 to 21 November. [...]
Director, Lily Dyble says, “What I see at the heart of this story is courage in the face of the unknown. Jane Eyre reminds us of the risk and enormity of love, but also how uncertainty can breed hope, as well as fear; that we can choose to fiercely love each other and ourselves, even within chaos, and even when our old lives have been lost to the fire. I'm thrilled to be bringing Jane's story to audiences across England this autumn, with the support of four wonderful venues and the RTST.”
Artistic Director of Mercury Theatre, Natasha Rickman says, “We are absolutely delighted to be working with Lily Dyble, who is a director of real vision and talent. We are thrilled also to be co-producing this with our friends at the Rose, Storyhouse and Northern Stage, and to be collaborating with the brilliant RTST; the Sir Peter Hall Director Award spotlights so much extraordinary talent throughout their process each year, and it was a joy to meet so many brilliant artists. I cannot wait to see Lily's staging of this epic and gripping story and to share it with audiences across the country, alongside our co-producers.” (Stephi Wild)
Also reported by Daily Gazette.

Starts at 60 features Natasha Lester's novel The Chateau on Sunset.
There’s a certain pull to stories that take something familiar and rework it into something new. With The Chateau on Sunset, Natasha Lester has taken Jane Eyre and placed it inside one of Hollywood’s most infamous hotels, the Chateau Marmont. The result leans into the glamour of the era while exposing what sat behind it. [...]
The idea did not begin in Los Angeles. It came to her on a train in Italy.
“I was sitting on a train to Florence, thinking about books I’d enjoyed,” Lester says. “Hello Beautiful by Ann Napolitano was one, which is loosely based on Little Women. Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver was another. Suddenly the idea popped into my head as I looked out at the Northern Italian countryside. What if I did something like that with one of my favourite books, Jane Eyre?
That moment shaped the direction of the novel. It also changed how she approached the story. She started with a literary foundation and asked what might happen if it unfolded in a place defined by fame, power and secrecy.
Her connection to Jane Eyre runs deeper than admiration. It is tied to what she believes the original heroine never truly received.
“Jane Eyre was a woman who yearned for liberty. She looked at the horizon and longed to go beyond it,” Lester says. “The ending is romantically satisfying, but she never really got what she most wanted. That didn’t seem fair.”
That sense of unfinished business became central to the novel.
“I wanted to write a story where Jane got both a romantically satisfying and a personally satisfying ending. An ending that such a great heroine deserved.”
The Chateau Marmont plays a strong role in the story, and its presence came about unexpectedly.
“I was struggling to find the voice of the story,” she says. “I started handwriting pieces just to see where my imagination would take me. In one of those, the Marmont took on a voice and a sense of itself. I loved it.”
From there, the hotel developed into something that feels watchful, holding onto the secrets of the people who pass through it. That reflects the real history of the Marmont, long associated with excess and scandal.
Researching Hollywood’s Golden Age revealed a version of the era that contrasts sharply with its polished image.
“There was a lot of ugliness beneath the glamour,” Lester says. “Women were fighting every day against a very male-controlled studio system that wanted to take away their power.”
That tension carries through the novel, particularly in how women were labelled, controlled and often silenced. Many of those stories were hidden or reframed at the time. (Emily Darlow)
Independent has an article on 'The charming Peak District valley with a defiant history' and mentions its Eyre connection:
No visit to the Peaks would be complete without a stop at the village of Hathersage, home to a heated open-air pool. It’s an idyllic village with a literacy legacy; its rugged landscapes inspired Jane Eyre (there’s even a Jane Eyre walking trail) (Jake Hall)
According to Times Now News, 'You don’t need to read 100 classics, just these 5 will change you' and Jane Eyre is one of them.

Daily Express has an 'Exclusive!' and goes on to tell about a recent plague of beetles in Haworth (not a metaphor for tourists, apparently).
A plague of beetles have caused havoc for visitors flocking to the village made famous by classic novel turned current blockbuster Wuthering Heights. Swarms of the flying insects created mayhem when they descended on the picturesque village of Haworth where people travel from all over the world to visit the Parsonage where the Brontë sisters Emily, Charlotte and Anne lived.
The aggressive beetles descended during last week’s warm weather converging on the mass of visitors making a homage to the historic West Yorkshire village, and now museum bosses and hospitality venues are bracing themselves for more summer swarms with warmer weather again on the horizon. According to one member of staff at the Parsonage the insects “came out of nowhere” on Wednesday lunchtime and were the worst he had ever experienced. He told people being as they queued outside the venue: “I was in the adjacent fields this morning and they were not there then, but suddenly around lunchtime they just appeared. There are lots of fields around so flies insects are not unusual but I’ve never known anything quite like this.”
One visitor Amelie, 21, from Edinburgh told how she had been enjoying al fresco lunch with her family on a café on the main street when they were suddenly “bombarded.”
She said: “We’d just found a lovely sunny spot and had just ordered our lunch when I spotted a beetle land on my drink glass. Then another landed, and another, and then I started feeling them on my neck, on my arms and on my legs. They were everywhere and by the time our meal arrived, we and everyone around us were swatting away like mad.
“But it got even worse once we joined the queue for the Parsonage and was so bad at one stage we considered abandoning our trip. It was better once we got inside, but they had found their way inside everyone’s clothing and it was pretty horrible to be honest. We were still finding them hours after we left Haworth – they seemed pretty invincible bugs but at least they didn’t bite. I hope it’s not a sign of things to come this summer.”
Katherine Hill, 53, from Leeds said: "It was such a beautiful spring day in one of my favourite places to visit. But the beetles caused mayhem, people were pulling them out of their shoes, their clothing, their hair and their ears. They were so small and there was just no escape - even inside the museum." (Paul Jeeves)
The blunder of the day comes from The Economic Times which misattributes to Emily Brontë a quote penned by Charlotte in an 1841 letter: 'If I could I would always work in silence and obscurity, and let my efforts be known by their results'.